It's probably worth contacting various suppliers to see what they can tell you; just phoning a large company's local country contact number and asking for technical support can help.
However, I should think that you're likely to need to do some experimental work yourself as well. Your post is a bit bare and general.
Simple resin-only shrinkage tests and simple uni- and bidirectional flat sheet laminate tests can begin to reveal fundamental material and lamainate behaviour. However, as 'Pro says, putting it together to try and predict real-world laminate cure-behaviour, maybe using arbitrary combinations of materials and ply directions, is very hard.
Depending on how your research and analysis skills stack up, you might find simple work plus 'micro-mechanics' methods profitable; or, you might find a more trial and error approach, perhaps guided by simple results, is better suited. (Or maybe you're embarking on a major piece of work which will involve charactisation of materials in hybrid liquid-gel-solid states at the molecular level...)
What you might get from suppliers (and maybe from googling research papers, etc.) is likely to be limited simple shrinkage data as described above.
When looking at the Internet for info, I've found that simple CTE data for carbon and glass is quite hard to come by (or, more accurately, there's quite a bit out there, but it tends to be variable and self-contradictory). Putting together basic resin CTE without any practical work is sort of doable, but establishing basic stuff like how much shrinkage occurs at what stage of gelation and how this interacts with adhesion to reinforcement is trickier.
Putting that sort of stuff together with macro laminate considerations and mold thermal characteristics is hard, hence the possibility of a more practical approach and a limited set of materials and manufacturing methods.